Unilever Promotes Handwashing Campaign Message Using Rotis

Mmm, roti. The king of South Asian unleavened flatbreads is a staple on the subcontinent, and, of course, is ubiquitous in the best Indian neighborhoods from Artesia in Los Angeles to Singapore’s Little India. And recently, these sublime carbohydrate bombs spread an important message about handwashing thanks to a Unilever campaign led by its timeless bar soap brand, Lifebuoy.

This literal “branding” campaign, sparked by both Lifebuoy and OglivyAction, took place during the recent Hindu festival known as the Kumbh Mela. This annual tradition sees millions of pilgrims take to cities such as Allahabad in order to purge away their sins in the Ganges. Allahabad was the scene of the tragic stampede on Sunday, which killed at least 36 people, and that tragedy dominated the headlines. But an important social message was passed on to those who gulped the 2.5 million rotis eaten during Kumbh Mela.

On each roti was emblazoned the message, “Did you wash your hands with Lifebuoy?” – in Hindi, of course. Restaurants throughout Allahabad served the doughy goodness with the message, and banners and billboards also broadcast the question during the festival. Roti, after all, is to be eaten with your hands, so there was more than just product placement going on here–handwashing has become a serious part of Unilever’s corporate social responsibility agenda.

Did you wash your hands with Lifebuoy?India Times

For Lifebuoy, this was perhaps one of the brand’s biggest moments since Ralphie on the classic holiday epic A Christmas Story had a bar of the garnet-colored soap jammed in his mouth after he blurted out, “Oh, fudge” (only, that’s not what he really said). For Unilever and its Sustainable Living Plan, the roti stamping was not only about Lifebuoy sales, but about using its brands to enact social change. Some of us may take handwashing for granted, but where clean water and sanitation are scarce, and poverty exacts a daily toll, such a routine falls by the wayside.

To that end, Unilever has sponsored several programs related to handwashing, including its co-founding of Global Handwashing Day, which the company first launched in 2008. Unilever claims that since the campaign launched, the deaths of children who have died from diarrhea have fallen by half. Unfortunately, 3,000 children under the age of five die daily from diarrhea–but the simple act of handwashing can prevent that disease as well as pneumonia. Spreading an important message instead of disease, and no annoying wrappers left behind? Truly this is a cause branding campaign that rises to the occasion.